mes: ‘ and forgot his days of battle: 2 « he College anauaniintehtasendabiemibenaasite ais Soren ecole arg * SNE SLI EPIL! LEI OE ES S, = VOL. _XXI, No, 23... 4: BRYN MAWR AND WAYNE, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 1935 COLLEGE Copyright BRYN MAWR NEWS, —=— WR PRICE 10 CENTS z A. MacLeish Reads Selections Chosen From Own Poetry Sheble Lecturer - Emphasizes Need of New Verse Form For Theatre HISTORY, ART, SATIRE, APPEAR IN HIS WORK Goodhart, May 1.—Mr. Archibald MacLeish, in giving the annual Sheble Memorial Lecture, formulated — this maxim: ‘When a man who writes verse is asked to speak in public, the only honest thing he can do is to read his poetry.’”’ .Mr. MacLeish proceed- ed, therefore, to read his own poetry. Since he felt that such a plan of ac- tion might be construed as self-indul- gence or as too great self-apprecia- tion, he offered the apology that a criticism of his contemporaries, which was the only alternative procedure, would actually amount ,to no more’ than talking of himself at second hand. But by talking of himself and his writings at: first hand, he could give authoritative information; he could explain the relation of his mate- rial’ to his verse and describe the structure and purpose of the poems he read. : First he spoke of the preface to Conquistador, This is the story of the Conquest of Mexico told through the mouth of a humble fighting soldier, Bernal Diaz. Just as he relates them, these deeds were really done, for Diaz was an actual historical figure. Al- though he marched in all the early ex- peditions into Mexico, and was one of the troop who occupied the chief city, Colua, he received no recognition for his services. After petitioning the Spanish government for years, he was at last granted a barren little farm in Guatemala. There he returned in despair; he married a native woman “But a musty student called} Gomara, who knew nothing of the old campaigns, undertook to write their history in such a way that all glory went to Cor- tez, and none to the soldiers who had fought and endured. Indignantly, Diaz, half blind, ancient, and feeble Continued on Page Five 9 LECTURE ON MAYA The Philadelphia Committee of the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Founding of Bryn Mawr College annotinces a lecture by Mr. Sylvanus Morley on The Maya, The Most Brilliant Civili- zation of Ancient America, on Mon- day, May 13, in-Goodhart at 8.20. The lecture will be illustrated by colored lantern slides. ’ Mr. Morley has been director of the project of the Carnegie Institute of Washington at Chichen Itza in Yuca- tan since 1924.. He is one of the lead- ing archaeologists in the middle Amer- ican field. He took his A.B. degree at Pennsylvania Military College in 1904 and received his Ph.D. there in 1921. He ‘also holds an M.A. degree from Harvard. He has had long experience in the practical-side of archaeology and among other things he worked from 1909-1914 in Central America and Mexico for the School of American Archaeology. He has been an associ- ate in the Carnegie Institute since 1915 and is\in charge of. the expedi- tions to Central America, - Mr. Morley is particularly interest- ed in Maya hieroglyphic writing and in general problems in middle Ameri- can archaeology. He has been trying to determine the Maya manner of speaking, a subject which is not yet very well developed. Some of his most exciting archaeological finds in- clude some beautiful turquoise mo- saics. ‘He has written several authori- ‘tative books on his subject — among them An. Introduction to, the Study of Maya Hieroglyphs, gn ZRF; iqand Inscriptions at Copan, in 20. This lecture promises to be inter- esting not only to all those working in archaeology, but also to the layman; Mr. Morley is a brilliant and lucid lec- turer, and has done some significant -work which he will demonstrate with his slides and lecture. Self-Government Ideals Discussed by Miss Park Goodhart, May 7..—Miss Park com-} bined several different topics in her She read first a Emmy Noether, pub- address in chapel. tribute to Dr. lished by Professor Einstein’ in the New York Times. Noether the greatest woman He says he consid- ers: Dr. mathematician since the day. when women were first given the opportun- ity of higher education. ed new methods in her own. field of She develop- modern algebra which have been in- valuable to mathematicians. Her stu- dents in Gottingen have become dis- tinguished under her guidance. After Germany had ungratefully dismissed her because of her Jewish parentage, she spent two happy and fruitful years in America. There were several further ee ship announcements made. Vung- Yuin Ting, of the Class of 1935, has been awarded a: four-year. scholar- ship at the Medical School of the University of Michigan. Five stu- dents. are to study at various univer- sities in Germany this summer, They include Adelaide Mary Davidson, Graduate Student; Sarah Helen Todd, ’36; Catherine Adams Bill, ’35; Louise Atherton Dickey, ’87, and Jeannette Morrison, ’35. These scholarships are given by the Institute for Interna- tional Education: The general theme of Miss Park’s address on “Self-Government” was: “In time of peace, prepare for war.” At this moment when there is no spe- cial case of infringement of the Self- Government regulations, it is wise to discuss the importance of these regu- lations. For 44 years Bryn Mawr students have been governed by them- selves. The immediate problems of life in a community such as this are embodied in the words of a set of rules, which are important as means to the end of controlled college exist-| ence planned to give maximum liberty to the individual and minimum fric- tion to the community. Curriculum schedules are planned and adhered to in order to assure that each student will receive that for which she comes here. Rules are made and followed for the care and feeding of babies and children in order that they may receive the attention necessary and proper for their best | development. * Self-Government regu- lations have always been, from their beginning under President Thomas, for that purpose. The achievement of this purpose depends on an intelligent public and a few careful officers. The responsibility which must fall on each student cannot be set down in. the rules themselves, but is self-evident in the whole governing’ body. SUTER TO RETURN In a year when the Alumnae As- sociation is contributing so much to the college, it seems suitable to an- nounce now one more addition to the steadily increasing number of gifts, Donations from individual members of the Association have made it pos- sible for the Sunday Service Commit- tee to invite Dr. John W. Suter, Jr., rector of the Church of the Epiphany, New York City, to hold seven serv- ices during the coming winter. Dr. Suter has chosen to come for four Sundays in October: and three more in the spring. The Committee wishes $e thank the Alumnae Association for making this possible. Because the Committee feels that a greater interest and-enthusiasm for Chapel develops when a aninister is on the campus for more than one Sunday, it has been able to arrange to have Dr. Alexander C. Zabriskie of the Theological Seminary, Alex- andria, Virginia, and Dr. William Pierson Merrill, rector of the Brick Presbyterian Church of New York City, come to the campus for three Sundays each. This means that the main interest in Chapel will eenter around these three ministers, but a few outstanding speakers of other denominations will be invited to fill qut the quota of services. SARAH FLANDERS, LETITIA BROWN. . | Marriner will discuss and play ° . College Calendar Friday, May 10: The Glee Club will present The Pirates of Penzance., Goodhart, 8.20 ” P.M. Saturday, May ‘11: Varsity Tennis Match with Vassar, 10 A. M. .-Pirates of . Penzance. Goodhart, 8.20 P. M. -Spring Dance. Gym 10 P. M. ’ Sunday, May 12: Music Without a Ticket by Catherine Drinker Bowen. Deanery, 5 P; Mi. Monday,. May 18: .. Mr. -Syl- vanus Morley will give an il- Justrated lecture on The’Maya, The Most: Brilliant Civilization of. Ancient America. Goodhart 8.20 P. M. Tuesday, May 14: Mr. Guy selections from Modern French Composers. Deanery, 5 P. M. Dennis Dance Group Gives Varied Recital Selection, Use of Music Superb In Faithful Interpretation Of Mood, Rhythm MANY INFLUENCES FUSED (Especially Contributed-by Marna V. Brady) Variety characterized the program of dances presented by Estelle Dennis and her Concert Group in Goodhart Hall, on April 18. Miss Dennis be- lieves that there is a place for lyric as well as angular and_ distorted movement in the dance today, and demonstrated that her group can. do both exceedingly well. Impromptu danced by Dorothea Brinkmann and the Concert Group, was a study in movement and group- ing to music by Reger. Love For. Three Oranges, one of the’ high spots of the evening, was danced by Estelle Dennis, assisted by Tom Mele—and~ Dorothea Brink- mann. Miss Dennis has a definite feeling for the mood of Prokofieff’s music and her choreography was well-adapted to it. As a dancer she is gifted in: expressing the mock un- couthness and the humorous quality of this composer’s work. The unique costumes of greenish tights and yel- low cellophane’ were designed by Miss Dennis herself. Gymnopedie, a line study by Char- lotte Boekel and Dorothea Brinkmann, was a series of statuesque poses con- nected by a sustained movement. The dance took place on a small platform against a back drop of black, and was illuminated by a _ bluish light which gave the dancers’ bodies the appearance of marble. In the Seriabin Prelude Opus 11— Etude opus 8, interpreted as ‘doom- ed” and. “rebellion,” Miss Dennis showed she had a controlled body at her command. Her movements were not ultra-modern, and she used her hands well. The dance itself was less subtle in interpretation and ex- pression than some of her others. The Chopin Waltz, a purely lyrical garland dance done by the Concert Group, was welcomed by the audi- ence for its feeling of joy in move- Continued on Page Six League Elections The Bryn Mawr League takes pleasure in announcing the fol- lowing elections for the year 1935-36: Secretary-Treasurer — Eliza- beth Bingham, ’36. Chairman of Summer Camp— Katherine Docker, ’36. Chairman of Sunday Services —Letitia Brown, ’37. Blind School—Irené Ls Haverford Community Center —FEsther Morley, ’36. Ferrer, : my Americanization — Helen Adler, ’38. Maids’ Chairman — Alison Raymond, ’38. Publicity — Cordelia Stone, 37. eae ie hig Og Be Rae eee nETS ee ea ori K Plays Modern Composers Mr. Guy Marriner, in the first of a series of lecture-recitals on’ Modern Composers, discussed the revolution- ary work: of Debussy in the develop- ment of Impressionism and the penta- sidered briefly the work of. Ravel, es- pecially in its use of the major sev- enth. Phese two composers, in at- fempting to express their own artistic ideals as completely as possible, con- tradicted all conventional rules of rhythm and harmony. Debussy was born near Paris in 1862 and after studying privately he entered the Paris Conservatory, wheré he ‘shocked his masters and fellow- pupils by writing strange harmonies in utter defiance of all the traditional rules which were taught there. When, like Beethoven, he was advised to curb his experiments. and relinquish his wild ideas, he insisted that so long as the sound was not unpleasant there was no reason to abide by harmonic rules. When he was awarded the Prix de Rome he used this opportun- ity in the Italian city to work out his novel ideas. Shortly after his return he visited Bayreuth, where he was impressed by Wagner’s work, but was unable to give it his unqualified ad- miration. Boris Godounov had a more profound effect upon:him.. By this time Debussy was completely cut off from all his musical colleagues be- cause of his new theories of harmony. His sympathies drew him to the poets and .painters whose conceptions were similar to his own, Many of these art- ists were attempting to separate the reactions of sense and reason, and to’ give pure. artistic impréssion - by avoiding direct representation. | This was the beginning of Impressionism into which Debussy entered with all his soul and energy. Henceforth he attempted to create the emotions re- sulting from thought, ‘sound, color, scent, and similar sensations as dis- tinct from the direct representation of these experiences. He developed his idiom from chords of the seventh, Continued on Page Four -tonie and -whole-tone scale, and con- | i Miss Park Reveals Guy Marriner Discusses, \{\ | Scholafship Awards In May Day Chapel Hinchman Memorial Scholarship Goes to Elizabeth Wyckoff For Major Work KENT, THOMPSON WIN SENIOR ESSAY PRIZE Goodhart, May 2.—A list of sixty- five undergraduategécholarships, thir- ty-one graduate Stholarships, nine spe- cial scholarships and prizes, and seven fellowship and scholarship awards was made public by the annual May Day ‘chapel service. The appointments of Ethel Glancy and Catherine Bill, both seniors, to teach next year at New York University and the Lycée de Jeunes Filles at Bourg- en-Bresse respectively, and the grad- uate fellowship in history at Rad- cliffe College awarded to Jean Morri- son, 1935, were also .announced’ at the same time. The Charles S. Hinchman Memorial Scholarship for the student who has shown the greatest ability in her major subject went to Elizabeth Wyckoff, 1936, for her work in Greek. The Leila Houghteling . Memorial Scholarship, which is awarded to a Freshman every three years to be held for three years on the basis of schol- arship, integrity, and public spirit, was awarded to Mary C. Sands, 1938. In the field. of English, five prizes or special scholarships were announc- ed. Elizabeth Kent and. Evelyn Thompson, 1935, divided the President M. Carey Thomas Essay Prize for the - student whose writing is the best in the Senior Class. A _ poetry prize, giventhfs year as a special honor® through Miss Lucy Martin Donnelly, of the English Department, was awarded to Gertrude:V. V. Franchot, of the Senior class. The Sheelah Kil- roy Memorial Scholarships in Fresh- man, Sophomore, and Advanced Eng- lish were awarded to Mary Mesier, Continued on Page Three Seniors Scramble For Hoops In Goodhart | As Rainy Dawn Fails To Damp May Spirit At precisely 5.30 A. M. on the morn- ing of May 2, the campus rang with the raucous ery of alarm-clocks, and the class of 1937 rose to greet a gray and dismal morning. Donning any- thing white that happened to be hang- ing out of a bureau drawer or lying on the closet floor, they jammed a few wilted apple blossoms into their lit- tle yellow May-baskets, plastered gen- ial smiles upon their wan_ coun- tenances, and- made off in the direc- tion of the fearful -din that they ree- ognized as the rest of their class and the waking-song. ‘In a few minutes, every undergraduate, freshman as well as senior, was sighing: blissfully as the pleasant tune -gently called her from an unregretted slumber. Almost an hour must have passed before a slight agitation became noticeable in the smoking rooms, and the gracious seniors descended to their coffee and rolls. After a leisurely repast, they garbed themselves in caps and gowns, and set off to wake the President with The Hunt Is Up. We must congratu- late Miss Park on being a most rapid dresser; in no time at all, she was being conducted by the hungry hordes on the way to Rockefeller. Here, the seniors scrambled up the tower stairs, and assembled on _ the arch roof. They shuffled their fect, cleared their throats, and stared at their song-books; in vain they tried to spot the sun to whom the song was dedicated. They were very much mis- tresses of the moment, however; al- though realizing that there was no sun, with all the savoir faire in the world, they burst forth with their mabiin..SOng—----«, When they wére finished, they trip- ped down once more from their lofty situation. Joining the undergraduate: jumble in Rockefeller, they watched with interest, as Miss Edith Rose, of Mexico City, crowned Miss _ Betty Lord, of Peoria, queen of the May. poe LSM NN SNORE EPS SIU ABI LAME Brana CRCRN IEE pe or ee Close on the heels of this ceremony followed a stampede for breakfast in the various halls, and thr a moment the campus was_comparatively silent. At eight, the college was out again, milling about Taylor in noisy antici- pation of our seniors’ antics. Profes- sional photographers were draped over Taylor steps, while the amateurs eag- erly occupied themselves .with . poses of the Misses Gardiner.’ Suddenly, we were aware of a strange thumping in the distance. “A Communist Pa- rade!” a freshman shrieked, but a motherly sophomore quieted her, and explained that it was just the band that had played for her on Parade Night. Then, with a giant blare, the band itself appeared, playing the fa miliar strains of the Morris On, — In front of the band, Peggy Little was executing her one-two-three hop to perfection. Behind it, we were conscious of somewhat similar leaps and bounds on the part of her class- mates, who were very cleverly swing- ing their May-baskets in time to the music. They rounded Taylor corner accurately, and then made for the low- er campus, carefully avoiding Senior Row and the grass-seed as they did so. As we skipped around the dancers “winding the May-poles, we had a mo- ment to think. We realized that the lower campus is just made for Little May-Day; at the same time, we could not help formulating an axiom to our- selves, namely, that ability in May- pole winding varies inversely with learning, and with experience, for somehow, the young bloods managed to turn. out-poles- that were very well done-tip, whereas those belonging to the graduates and seniofs reminded us | strongly. of youthful attempts at Cat’s Cradle. Then, under the big May-pole, Miss Park presented Miss Lord (again of Continued on Page Three 2 PM NC NOME eee SBE ARR RIT RE BI ME SBE NLA ase ss Miss Park, at _. ‘Page Two { THE COLLEGE NEWS > THE GOLLEGE NEWS (Founded in 1914) Published weekly dicing “the College Year .(excepting during "Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter Holidays, and during examination weeks) in the interest of - Bryn Mawr College at the Maguire oe Wayne, Pa., and Beyn Mawr College. The College News is fully protected by édpyright. Nothing that appears in it may be reprinted either wholly or in part. witheut written permission of the Editor-in- Chief. 4 a _ Editor-in-Chief BARBARA CARY, ’36 News Editor Copy Editor ' HELEN FISHER, ’37 ANNE MARBURY, ’37 Editors ES CAROLINE C. BROWN, ’36 ANNE E. KREMER, 737 “HELEN B, HARVEY, ’37 ELIZABETH LYLE, '37 MARGARET HOUCK, ’37. JANET THOM, 738 Mary H. HvutTcHINGS, ’37 Mary. PETERS, ’37 Sports Editors SYLVIA H. EvANs, ’37 Lucy KIMBERLY, Business Manager JEAN. STERN, ’36 Advertising Manager Subscription Manager DOREEN CANADAY, ’36 ALICE COHEN, 736 * Assistants 37 37 r SUBSCRIPTION, $2.50 MAILING PRICE, $3.00 SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY BEGIN AT ANY ‘TIME CORDELIA STONE, ’37 ° ALICE G. KING, Entered as second-class matter at the Wayne, Pa., Post Office ,number of scheduled quizzes. Bachelor of Arts ‘The recent article about campus life which appeared in Vogue | con- tained a number of comments which. were rather novel to many. Among the most interesting of these was the remark-that “Bryn Mawr is very much of a singing college.” To be sure, we have always been justly proud of the musical education which can be obtained here, but nevertheless, we have frequently felt that our singing has become almost an incidental*and perhaps an outworn tradition. We would like to see not only the continu- ance of our interest in group singing, but also the development of a greater number of group activities of all sorts. The ability to entertain and amuse oneself and one’s friends is a valuable and important one, and it is often neglected to such an extent that: we become dependent on outside sources ofa more formal and more expensive’ nature. It has long been our belief that there are far too many people whose real talents go undiscovered and unappreciated in the general course of college life. Not only is the musical interest and ability of many students not uncovered for the benefit of their fellows, but many other qualities and interests, such as the reading and writing of poetry and the pursuit of various hobbies, are not; revealed. Some energy is, nevertheless, being expended along this line in several fields. For example, the course in Play Writing affords the ambitious would-be dramatist the Opportunity to see her play staged, and thus she may gain some idea of its qualities, its pro- portions and its facility for production. poets who occasionally meet to listen to one another’s poetry and to help each_ other with difhcult—problems.—_Still_another—activity—is_the—-weekly meeting of the artistically minded who gather together to model and to do charcoal drawings in the secrecy of the Gymnasium basement. There is room for a great deal more of this type of interest, however. One of the least developed spheres of activity is music, in which there are already the regular and formal organizations like Glee Club and Choir. These, however, require special abilities which not everyone is so fortunate as ‘to possess. Next Sunday’s entertainment at the Deanery should give us an inspiration for the possibilities of music for ordinary mortals. The idea behind the program is that almost everybody can be musical or have musical interests if he only puts the time and the interest into it. If, per- haps, a group of students could organize themselves along somewhat the same lines as the amateur group which is to play here next Sunday, we feel sure that not only would they themselves profit immensely thereby, but that, in addition, their fellows of lesser ability would gain both enjoyment and satisfaction. Once such a development as this were instituted, and interest aroused, it would be a comparatively simple matter to carry this kind of activity into other fields as well. Oyez! Oyez! We have been informed that the faculty are soon going to consider and vote on the question of reducing the number of scheduled quizzes. We feel, therefore, that we must once more take up the gauntlet and reiterate our desire for fewer mid-semester examinations. - We are wholeheartedly in favor of a considerable reduction in the The report of the Curriculum Committee in February suggested that such quizzes be omitted in Freshman English, French and German literature, half-unit and one-hour courses, and advanced courses. In several other unit courses there should be quizzes in the first semester only, chiefly to acclimate the Freshmen to our college ways. Most important of all, with this reduction it would be possible to decrease the quiz period from four weeks to eight college days. Reading quizzes could and should still be given, but these would not come at a time when we were already busy with other similar tests. There are many convincing reasons that we, at least, can find to sup- port these suggestions. We admit that the purpose of quizzes,—to coérdi- nate lecture’ and reading material, to show the student where she stands, and to make her catch up on’ her work,—is an admirable one. In practice? however, it is a different matter. Quizzes seem to interrupt rather than to promote the reorganization of work. They are particularly~upsetting to advanced-and honor students, who must stop their regular work te concen- trate on some other subject in which they are not so primarily interested. - The standard of work goes down considerably during the quiz period, and the number of cuts greatly increases. .This does not always mean that we ‘are dilatory and do nothing until the night before the quiz, but, age it |. eres en-weook mest oto see to sl cus tes Sad ee There is also a group of practicing WIS END) Round a curve of frequency . ’ Sigma once encountered me Adding up a lengthy column, Calculating, grim and solemn, Medians, and means, and modes; Derivations, weights of toads; Average guessed and average true-» L| “Sigma, help me with a few!” Sigma answered, “Con-cen-trrate If you want to correlate!” —Probable Error. GUESS WHO? A young lady from Bryn Mawr College,;who was writing a thesis on labor problems for a-course in eco- nomics, picked the Autocar Company as the most likely subject. She inter- viewed one of the officials of the Company and impressed him by the pertinent questions she asked. “That young lady knows what she wants,” he thought. She expressed a desire to go through the factory and. the official suggested that she come around in a couple of: days. When she returned it-happened that he was tied up with conferences and could not see her. So she explained the situation to the doorman. He told her that it would not be possi- ble for her to go through the fac- tory at that time. His unstated rea- son: the young lady was, as he put it, “all dolled up” and had bare legs. The sight of so much epidermis and pulchritude, he was . afraid, would have an unfavorable effect on the efficiency of the workers in the plant. Perhaps if she were to put on dark glasses, cotton stockings and a shapeless dress the doorkeeper might be more lenient. (Reprinted from The Main Liner) If any day Some time next year, You want a rime, From me steer clear. I tossed up six For those who asked it, One rimes to fix Each dear May basket Of garlands fair. I tore my hair, O’er blossoms native For seniors so Appreciative. _—Minnie Madrigal. ‘ie Why is a Trilobite? (A Triassic tragedy in three scenes) A. L. Goodman—S. B. Park—M. J. Tyler CHARACTERS: TRILOBITE, a persevering hero. CORAL, the favorite girl of the town. GASTROPOD, her uncle, a can- tankerous colonel, a real old fossil. ANTICLINE. SYNCLINE, her nephew from Har- risburg, who isn’t on the level. SLICKENSIDES, an igorant intru- sion into the peaceful formation. MAW CHUNK, the mother of them all, THE LITTLE BOULDERS, her small orogeny. ‘ BLASTOID, her son, the slave of duty. THE SCHIST OF THE PLAY | Coral, a simple Devonian maid, is just back from Schooley and lives with her uncle, Gastropod.. Gastropod is very hard when he isn’t in his cups, but then he’s biotite. He is trying to teach Coral to shale her own boat. Trilobite has loved Coral since she was a little dike. Coral is timiskam- ing of love, but Slickensides is Boul- der. Slickensides has just flowed into town, and is trying to make a con- tact with Trilobite. Her cleavage is good, but Trilobite just says, “Let’s put on the radiolarian.” Coral knows it isn’t her fault that she is too slate to get Trilobite. Coral is so dippy from grief that she wants to strike out on her own. Syncline plunges into town to stay with his mother’s sister, Anticline. Syncline squeeze Coral, but she is resistant. Maw Chunk is Coral’s old nurse. Her son, Blastoid, has long loved Coral. Maw Chunk has heard Talus about Coral and Syncline, and she sknows LINES TO THE HAPPY MEDIUM. has metamorphic powers. He tries to| they are really uneonformable. She stirs Blastoid to help Coral, who is really a gneiss girl, Maw Chunk is giving a ball for her biggest boulder, who is being uplifted. Blastoid, Gas- tropod,. Trilobite, Slieckensides,-Coral, Syncline and a motley conglomerate are there. Slickensides is all horst out for the occasion with a marcellus wave in her hair and plenty of tale on her nose. She has -a micaceous gleam in her eye. Blastoid pins a sign on her back, “Caution, soft shoulder!” A number of streams trickle in. The younger ones in V-Shaped gorges cut in right and left, but the more maturé, wearing their best ox-bows, meander around and deposit themselves in com- fortable deltas. Syncline has performed a revolution and has‘Coral uptilted with him. He crushes her in a molten embrace, “Aa, I lava’ you,” he cries. , “Al bite,” says Coral. : Meanwhile Slickensides and Trilo- bite are sitting on a sill. “I’m simply éroded without you,” murmurs Slickensides. “Let’s play the radiolarian,” Trilobite. Blastoid is completely unconsolidat- ed by the sight of Syncline and Coral. says “Oriskany -my life for -her,” he cries. “Granite that I muy: shoot straight.” : He threatens Syncline. “Cease your intruding or you'll diorite,” he says. Syneline tightens his tropical belt and gives him a glacial stare. “Striations!” he cries. Blastoid does not hesitate. He shoots Syncline. He turns to Coral. “T did it for the best,” he says. “He was just a serpentine at heart. May you and Trilobite be conformable.” Coral folds up. Blastoid realizes he is a murderer. He blows out his brains and is buried in his five-fold symmetry. Slickensides has decided that Trilo- bite is nothing but’a moraine. She has found that in spite of his dapper pygidium he is really impecunious. She is pursuing the more opulent, but crusty colonel, Gastropod. Trilobite still loves Coral. Coral’s secret ambition is to have a little colonial home in the south with a crinoid garden. So she is only too pleased when Trilobite come up and says, “Let’s play the radiolarian.” She shows him the spirifer of the little chert on the hill and they ooze out together. Oh micaceous! SELF PORTRAIT Poison Ivy in my eyes, Poison Ivy on my thighs, Poison Ivy on my feet, ‘Oh, My Gawd, but I look sweet! Cheerio, THE MAD HATTER. News of the New York Theatres Despite the usual spring lethargy that prevails on Broadway, theatrical activities have not been- completely suspended. There are still several tried-and-true productions (and some tried-and-not-so-true), on the boards, and several openings have _ been scheduled for the near future. Any- thing Goes is to run for eight weeks more, while Petrified Forest, Tobacco Road, and Personal Appearance con- tinue to attract the Great American Audience. And;-we urge, still, again, and just as strongly as ever, that you see The Children’s Hour. -Two rumors, both of. them very interesting, have been ~-whispered about lately. Katherine Cornell is reputed to be planning a revival of her most outstanding success, Can- dida, upon the demise of her current vehicle, Flowers of the Forest. Miss Cornell has been quite faithful to her plan, new this year, of'presenting a number of plays rather than one, in a season. Candida, if produced, should crown her efforts of the year. The Lunts, now loitering in Genesee Depot, Wisconsin,. are said to have Anthony and Cleopatra up their sleeves. If they return, and return in such glory, as this, from their ignominious retirement after Point Valaine, the result should be a high point of the year. Clifford Odets’ Waiting for Lefty continues to attract audiences claim- ing to be Interested in a Cause. Not particularly well-written, the play nevertheless contains such. emotional and hysterical ‘mob-appeal Set the ancl oie > quiz period. This can be done only by the adoption of some such sugges- '|tions as the above. Once. it is accomplished, we are sure that the under- >| gra ee ea. foes ‘+ Tuesday and Wednesday, audience clamors nightly over the footlights in various degrees of rage. Waiting for Lefty should be seen for its experimental value in the field of play writing, since it would seem to Se eee CUR ee mark..a.step in the eo stage technique. Tallulah Bankhead has — not as the sodden Sadie Thompson of Rain, but ‘as. the “theatre’s: most glamorous actress,” in Something Gay. Miss Bankheft’s talent for comedy, which far exceeds her ability in “drammer,”’ should provide an amas- ‘ing evening. The opening of Par ade, with Jimmy Savo, on May 20, is the latest production scheduled -for this year’s theatrical calendar. | 4 IN PHILADELPHIA Theatres Broad: The Bishop Behaves is a decidedly mediocre drama. about a bishop who turns detective. Cecil Lean and Cleo Mayfield take the lead- ing roles in the production. Chestnut: ‘In First Legion there are a few memorable moments. It is a moving picturization of faith lost and regained, laid among a group of Jesuit priests. Bert Lytell plays the lead. Academy of Music: The Savoy Opera Company will present Gilbert and Sullivan’s Ruddigore on Friday and Saturday. The cast of this. op- eretta, sub-titled The Witch’s Curse, will include Frank Moulan, William Swayze, Marjorie Snowden and Junia Culbertson. Movies ° Aldine: George Arliss in Cardinal Richelieu will be replaced on Satur- day by Victor Hugo’s Les Miserables, with Fredric March, Charles Laugh- ton, Florence Eldridge, Rochelle Hud- son and many others. The screen ver- sion of the classic falls short of the standard set by Hugo, but it is inter- esting to see just how Hollywood pro- duces,. in about three minutes, the period spent in the sewers. If you don’t want to see a fairly chopped production, avoid this. Arcadia: On Friday Naughty Marietta, with Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy, will supplant Miss- issippi. A spectacle, full of good sing- ing, it is one of the better movies now running. Boyd: G-Men is, a dashing melo- drama, which, though not top-notch, is the best of entertainment. It is a story of the struggles of the organized Government men against the better organized gangsters and racketeers of the underworld. James Cagney, Mar- garet Lindsey, Ann Dvorak and Rob- ert Armstrong head the cast. Earle: Friday brings Party Wive, with Jean Arthur and Victor Jory. A poor excuse for any kind of enter- © tainment and not. worth considering. Fox: That star of stars, Miss Shir- ley Temple, arrives this Friday as Our Little Girl. obviously for its leading lady, but she turns in another of her natural per- formances, which makes it all right. Joel McCrea and Rosemary Ames help Shirley smile. Z Karlton: Baby Face Harrington, with Una Merkel and Charles Butter- worth. Those two riotous fun-makers make ‘it an hilarious show. Keith’s: Black Fury, featuring Paul Muni and Karen Morley, begins Friday. A picture of the existence in the coal-mining districts, which is dra- matic and sincere. Worth seeing, if only for its timeliness: ~ Stanley: The Bride of von, Git stein, with Boris Karloff, Elsa Lan- chester and Colin Clive, will open on Saturday. The long-awaited sequel to the horror film, Frankenstein, is a gruesome picture, which will make you either squirm or turn up your nose and walk out. Stanton: Ann Sothern and Ralph Bellamy struggle through Fight Bells, which is far from a top-rank produc- tion. : Local Movies Ardmore: Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, Gary Cooper and Anna Sten in The Wedding Night; day, Love in Bloom, featuring George Burns and Gracie Allen; Monday, Private Worlds, with Claudette Colbert and Charles Boyer. ° Wayne: Thursday, Friday * so Saturday, Irene Dunne, Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers in Roberta. Seville: Wednesday and Thursday, All the King’s Horses, with Carl Bris- , Mary Ellis and Edward Everett orton; Friday and Saturday, George ote | in xd Tron . Du es The movie was made - Satur- — ‘| FAETH AND LITTLE STAR - day against Beaver College. her feet. _eross-court shots, she made up for “Miss Park Reveals ; THE COLLEGE NEWS are se eT aE A AES. SAE ~ Page Three Bryn Mawr Defeats “Opponents on Courts ~ 9 Varley Tennis Team Coaauirs _ Beaver Squad by Brilliant, Steady Playing On Wednesday the Bryn Mawr Tennis team had another successful Varsity won all of the four matches ed— three singles matches and one dou- bles, In spite of the cold weather, the’ Bryn Mawr team warmed up easily and kept up their usual fast and steady pace against a flashy but quickly tiring team. The first match between Faeth, of Bryn Mawr, and Marsh, of Beaver,# a went to Miss Faeth with the decisive scores of 6-1 and 6-2. . Miss Faeth’s long drives and good placing gave her the advantage over her opponent who was rather ‘weak and slew on The next match was won by Betty Perry against Staples, of Beaver. The first two sets were evenly matched with scores of 7-5 and 5-7, but Miss Perry won the third 6-0. Her opponent’s main point was her placing; she consistently drew Miss Perry up to the net and then lobbed over her head, but Miss Perry was -quick enough on her feet to return! most of them. The match was a good example of a steady player wearing down a flashy one.* The match between Little and Orr was again won by Bryn Mawr when the Beaver player dropped the first two sets 4-6 and 2-6. “Miss Little played unusually. well, and although she missed some of her opponents’ it by steady pounding drives and ace services. Because of lack of time, only one doubles match was played and this one was- between Jackson and Little, of Bryn Mawr, and Marsh and Orr, of Beaver. Jackson and Little repeated the succfBses of the early afternoon by taking the first two sets 6-0 and 6-3. The Beaver team seemed a lit- tle tired after their earlier matches whereas Jackson was perfectly fresh and Little seemed unaffected by the strain of her earlier match. Summary: First Singles: Marsh, Beaver, vs. Faeth, B. M.; won by Faeth, 6-1, 6-2. Second Singles: Staples, Beaver, vs. Perry, B. M.; won by Perry, 7-5, 5-7, 6-0. Third Singles: Orr, Beaver, vs. Little, B. M.; won by Little, 6-4, 6-2. Doubles: . Marsh and Orr, Beaver, vs. Jackson and Little, B. M.; won by. Jackson and Little, 6-9, 6-3. Because of the rain last Saturday, the game scheduled against the Ger- mantown Cricket Club was called off. Scholarship Awards Continued from’ Page One 1938; Elizabeth Lyle, 1987, and Mar: garet Honour, 1936. The Elizabeth Shippen Scholarships, awarded for distinction in a special subject, went to Marion’ Bridgman, 36, and Jean Holzworth, ’36, for their work in science and language. Eliza- beth Wyckoff, 1936, won, in addition to the Hinchman Scholarship, the Maria L. Eastman Brooke Hall Mem- orial Scholarship for the member of the junior class with the highest average... Miss Wyckoff’s average -is 86.925. The graduate and undergraduate awards were as follows: HeELEN SCHAEFFER HUFF MEMORIAL RESEARCH SCHOLARSHIP Melba Newell Phillips, A.B., Oak-J land City .Gollege, 1926; M.A., Battle Creek College, 1928; Ph.D., University of Califor- nia, 1933. Research Associate in the Department of Physics, University of California, 19338- 34, and Instructor in Physics, 1934-35. RESIDENT FELLOWSHIPS | BIOLOGY E. Frances Stilwell, A.B., Smith College, 1922; M.A., 1924. Graduate Student, University of’ Chicago, 1924-25 ‘and 1927- 28. Assistant in the Depart- ment of Zoology, Smith Col- lege, 1922-23; Instructor, 1925- 29, and Assistant Professor, Sci eo 1929-85. CHEMISTRY . Edith Ford Sollers, A.B., Goucher College, 1931; M.S., University of Pennsylvania, 1934. Fellow in Chemistry, Bryn Mawr Col- lege, 193_-35. CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY Dorothy Annette Schierer, A.B., Mount Holyoke College, 1933; M.A., Bryn Mawr College, -1934. Joseph A. Skinner Fellow from . Mount Holyoke College and f Scholar in Classical’ Archaeol- ogy, Bryn Mawr College, 1933- 34, and Frances Mary Hazen Fellow from Mount Holyoke College and Scholar in ‘Classi- cal Archaeology, Bryn Mawr College, 1934-35. ECONOMICS AND POLITICS Ruth Catharine Lawson, ° A.B., Mount Holyoke College, 1933; M. .A., Bryn Mawr College, 1934. Scholar in Economics and Politics, Bryn Mawr Col- lege, 1933-34, and Fellow ‘in Economics end Politics, 19384- 35. I. NGLISH Constance Marianne Brock, B.A., McGill University, 1928; B.A., Oxford University, 1930, and M.A., 1934; Scholar in English, Bryn Mawr College, 1933-35. GEOLOGY Sarah Grace Hower, A.B., Barnard College, 1983; Graduate Stu- dent, Columbia University, 1933-35. GERMAN Etta Albrecht, A.B., Earlham Col- lege, 1934; Helene Lange Ober- realschule, Hamburg, Germany, 1930-33; Earlham. College, 1933-34; Earlham College, Scholar, Bryn Mawr College, 1934-35. GREEK Adelaide Mary Davidson, A.B., Pembroke College in Brown University, 1933; Arnold Arch- as aeological Fellow from Brown University at Bryn Mawr Col- lege, 1933-35, and Scholar in Greek, Bryn Mawr College, 1934-35. HISTORY Joan Mary Vassie Foster, B.A., Me- Gill _University, 1923; M.A., 1925; B.A., Oxford University, 1927; M.A., 1981; Graduate Student, Bryn Mawr College, 1934-35. HISTORY OF ART Jane Morrill Martin, A.B., Barnard College, 1934; Graduate Stw- dent, Mills College, 1934-35. LATIN Jane Isabella Marion Tait, B.A.., University of Toronto, 1934; Fellow in Classics, University of Toronto, 1934-35. MATHEMATICS Aynita Tuller, A.B., Hunter Col- ~~ lege, 1929; M.A., Bryn Mawr College, 1930. Graduate Schol- ar in Mathematics, Bryn Mawr : College, 1929-30. PHILOSOPHY . Martha Hurst, B.A., Oxford Univer- sity, 1933. Fellow, University of North Carolina, 1933-34; Holder of Senior Studentship of the Goldsmiths’ Company, London, and Fellow in Philos-|, ophy, Bryn Mawr College, 1934- 35. PSYCHOLOGY- Marian Bellamy Hubbell, A.B.. Swarthmore College, 1934; Graduate Student, Columbia University, 1934-35. ROMANCE LANGUAGES Mary Lane Charles, A.B., Earlham College, 1927; M.A., Bryn Mawr College, 1928. Graduate Student in French, Bryn Mawr College, 1927-28, and Scholar in French. 1928-29 and 1934-35.: Riith \Adele. McDaniel, A.B., Uni- versity of Missouri, 1926; M.A., ' 1928, and B.S.,:in Education, 1933. SocIAL ECONOMY CAROLA | WOERISHOFFER FELLOW- SHIPS Clara Alberta Hardin, A.B:,’ Uni- versity of Colorado, 1928, and M.A., 1930. Carola Woerishof- fer Fellow in Social Economy, Bryn Mawr College, 1934-35. ' Gertrude Dorothy Hill, A.B., Uni- versity of Nebraska, 1934. Ca- rola Woerishoffer Scholar’ in Social. Economy, Bryn Mawr College, 1934-35. GRADUATE SCHOLARSHIPS, 1935-36: BIoLoGy Sylvia Butler Rouse, A.B., Mount Holyoke College, 1931: MA; - Brown University, 1934. Grad- SCAVENGER HUNT The Scavenger Hunt for the benefit of the Bryn Mawr Summer School and the Bryn Mawr Summer Camp is to be held Wednesday, May 15. Captains will assemble their teams,..which should include at least. one faculty member, under Pembroke Arch at eight o’clock, Roller skates and bicyles may be-used*by the hunters, but auto- mobiles are forbidden. At nine-thirty the teams will meet in the Gymnasiugn and display their spoils before the judges, Mrs. Nahm, Dr. Ernst. Diez, and Dr. Fenwick. Prizes are.to be awarded on the basis of exactness and the imagination shown in the collee- tion of the required objects. There will be refreshments and dancing until ten-thirty. Outsiders are welcome, Admission is fifty cents. uate: Student, Brown Univer- sity, 1932-34; Graduate Scholar in Biology, Bryn Mawr College, 1934-35. SPECIAL SCHOLARSHIP Mary ‘ Burton Derrickson, A.B., Goucher College, 1930; M.A., Syracuse University, , 1932. Graduate Assistant in Zoology, Syracuse University, 1930-32; Assistant in Zoology, Vassar College, 1934-35. NON-RESIDENT Eleanor Hugins Yeakel, A.B., Bryn Mawr College, 1933, and M.A., 1934. Graduate Student in Bi- ology and Chemistry, Bryn Mawr College, 1933-34, and Non-Resident Scholar in Biol- ogy, 1934-35. - CHEMISTRY Ruth Mary Rogan, B.S., H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College, Tulane University, to be- con- ferred, 1935. CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY Sara Anderson, A.B., Mount Hol- yoke College, to be conferred, 1935. Frances Follin Jones, A.B.,. Bryn Mawr College, 1934. Graduate Student in Classical Archaeol- ogy and Greek, Bryn Mawr Col- lege, 1934-35. {SCONOMICS AND POLITICS Mildred Sylvia Fishman, A.B., Bar- nard College, to be conferred, 1935. IEXDUCATION NON-RESIDENT Alma Ida Augusta Waldenmeyer, A.B., Bryn Mawr College, to be conferred, 1935. I. NGLISH Louise Gerardine Lewis, A.B., Bar- nard College, 1924; M.A., Co- lumbia University, 1926, Grad- uate Student, Universities of Montpellier and Paris, 1930-31; Instructor in English, Univer- sity of Delaware, 1931-35. Ruth Preston Miller, A.B., Cornell University, 1932; M.A., 1934. Graduate Student, Cornell Uni- versity, 1932,-February, 1935.: [(RENCH Catherine Fehrer, A.B., Vassar Col lege, 1934. Graduate Scholar in French, Bryn Mawr College, 1934-35. , Grace Carolyn Carter, A.B., Mount Holyoke College, to be confer- red, 1935. “ I°RENCH NON-RESIDENT Constance Hyslop, A.B., Mount Holyoke College, 1928; M.A., University of Pennsylvania, 1933. Graduate Student, Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, 1931- 33; Assistant in the Depart- ment of Romance Languages, Mount Holyoke College, 1933- 84; Holder of the 1905 Fellow- ship from. Mount. Holyoke Col- ~ lege studying at Bryn Mawr, * 1934-35. GEOLOGY Ruth Helen Johnson, B.S., Univer- sity of New Hampshire, 1934. Graduate Scholar in Geology, Bryn Mawr College, 1933-35. GERMAN Beth Cameron Busser, A.B., Bryn| Mawr College, 1933. German Exchange Fellow through In- stitute of International Educa- tion, University of Munich, 1933-34; Graduate Student in “<* German and Philosophy, Bryn Mawr College, 1934-35. GREEK Cordelia Elizabeth Alderson, A.B., University-ef Nebraska, 1932; M.A., 1933. Graduate Student, University of Nebraska, 1932- 33, and Teaching Fellow in Classics, 1933-35. Continued on Page Four : British. League Groans : Visits Campus on Tour On. Saturday, May 4, a group of English men and women visited the college under the guidance of Miss Anne Tynan, herself an English woman, who is particularly interested in Bryn Mawr. She “studied here about fifteen years ago in the Carola Woerischoffer Department of Social .Economy, and considers the year she spent at Bryn Mawr very impottant, as it greatly influenced her career.. Since her return to England she has been ®ssociated with the 2 League of Nations Union and is particularly in- terested in its political side. Her duties include escorting groups of the various local unions of the asso- ciation- on observation trips in dif- ferent -countries. They travel with the purpose of investigating condi- tions in these countries and of ‘esablishing friendly relations between them and England. They are mem- bers in some cases of the working class, and all of them are interested in labor conditions everywhere. There -were twelve in the group who ‘were shown the campus and en- tertained in Goodhart.. One of them is especially -interested in the prob- lem of slum clearing and better hous- ing conditions for the working classes. He is a member of the Mu- nicipal Council of the Labor. Party in Leeds which is at present occupied with remedying these unfortunate conditions. The Council is trying to do away with the very unsatisfactory little “back-to-back”? houses’ in ‘which many of the Leeds. workers are obliged to live. He is also President of the Central Labor Union of Leeds. Miss Park, Dr. and Mts. Smith, Miss Kingsbury, and Dr. Fenwick were assisted by Miss Howe, Migs ReQua and several of the undergrad- uates in entertaining and _ talking with the visitors at the reception given them in the Common Room. Miss Tynan described the visitors as the “sturdy, hard-working people who are the backbone of the League of Nations Union in this country (Great Britain). They are not rich or dis- tinguished, except with the\ very real distinction that comes from devotion to an ideal.” Rainy Morning Fails To Damp May Spirit Continued from Page One Peoria). with two tortoise-shell brace- lets, and the latter young lady \re- sponded with the following poem, the result of a Bryn Mawr education: “T’m-not the ‘very model’ of an old ot modern Queen of May, neither golden tresses nor a countenance so pink and gay; I’ve And if you go by Frazer who, they. tell me, is no one to lie, ‘Vegetation’s spirit’ I should, by rights, personify. I should be clothed in flowing robes, “and mounted on a_ horse so white Or on the backs of two professors (who a’horse so well do simu- lite) And I should have a handsome king, | according to the precedent, (But then again, could one ask more than a college president?). But granted that the case is not exactly as friend Vogue relates, It’s quite unique, and well apart from stern Reason’s cold dic- tates; For e’er the dawn comes up like thunder o’er doomed Dalton ’cross the way, We’re roused, and not by Tenn’son’s ‘mother dears,’ to greet the May; telegrams to Roosevelt, quotas, and Euripides Are for the moment quite forgot as | blithe and gay we trip the teas; And our last fine careless rapture) we blighted Seniors unfurl And E’er A.B.’s vanquish rapture, and we _ face the ‘wearrry worrrld.’ So though we’re not village lassies, nor communists in Central | Park, We’re full of May Day spirit,. and | of many thanks to you, Miss Park After much laughter and applause, the crowd scattered, only to find them- selves once more reunited, this time in Goodhart. The undergraduates all had a good time clapping for the sen- iors’ skipping, and they behaved very ve dae and | nicely during chapel. When it was over, however, and someone announc- ed that because of the rain, hoop-roll- ing would take place indoors, -there was some confusion. The aisle was a bit narrow, and it is impossible to state just who the lucky hoop-roller was who won early matrimony as her prize. Phe hoops and sticks were giv- en away by their weary possessors, who, were forced between nfany a row of seats; and over many a chair-back before they could reach. the fprtunate heiresses.* .At one point, we thought we heard a voice say, “Yes, sir! That’s my Baby!” and, upgn looking up, we were both prised and pleased to - see a young dogfish with ‘a’ ribbon around his neck, entering the hand- me-down tradition. At the knell of ten o’clock, the party ended with a round of class songs, and students and professors wended their ways to work. The subsequent classes seemed to be peculiarly marked by an undertone of humming, as well as by a lack of concentration. All in all, we think it was a most successful May- Day, in spite of the gtass-seed, and the strange numeral on the calendar. ROSEMONT SERVICE At Miss Park’s suggestion, the Bryn Mawr College Choir took part in a Special Service of Musie with the Good Shepherd Choir in the Church of the Good Shepherd at Rosemont. The service was held on Sunday, May fifth, at four-thirty and Solemn Even- song was sung by the combined choirs,: including Psalms chanted to special arrangements, The Magnificat, the Nune Dimittis and the Te Dewm of Stanford in B Flat. ° The Bryn Mawr Choir appreciated very much the opportunity of singing with the choir of men’s and boys’ Voices. In addition the following selections were sung by the Bryn Mawr College Choir: “T waited for the Lord” (from “Hym of Praise’) Mendelssohn “Tenebrae factae sunt,” “Crucifixus” Palestrina “The Lord is my Shepherd” Schubert “O Jesu, so sweet,” ‘Now all the woods are sleeping,” J.S. Bach “Hallelujahs Amen” (from “Judas Maccabaeus’’) Handel The music of both choirs was under the direction of Mr. Willoughby, who is organist and choirmaster of the Chuch of the Good Shepherd. MUSIC FOR FUN The eleventh of the series of Sun- day afternoon entertainments in the Deanery is a musical program given . by Catherine Drinker Bowen, to be held next Sunday at 5 P. M. The title of the program, Music Without a Ticket, does not, perhaps, reveal the interesting nature of Mrs. Bow- en’s entertainment. Shé is a great believer in making music available to a large group of people and is par- ticularly interested in getting more people to take an active part in mus- ical, affairs. She organized a group of amateur musicians from among her family and friends who gather together frequently for musical eve- /nings. They had so much fun doing | this that Mrs. Bowen thought that /more people ought to have a chance to see\how really easy it-is to or- ganize such a group. Accordingly, she and her friends are coming to the Deanery not only to play ordin- ary selections, but also to show how to compose songs and group pieces, All those who are musically minded should make a point of attending the program. Campus Notes An article on Plato by the late | Professor Theodore de Laguna was given special attention in a survey of ‘recent philosophical literature in the last issue, of the Hibbert Journal. x ~ * Miss Martha Hurst, Fellow in the ‘Department of Philosophy at Bryn 'Mawr, has had her paper, /mplica- | tion in 4B. C., accepted for publica- |tion in a forthcoming issue of Mind. ~ * « : | Dr. Weiss’s paper Time and the Absolute, which he read at the last meeting of the American Philosophi- cal Association, will appear in the next issue of the Journal of Phil- osophy. | ne Por mS in this paper are reli- able merchants. Deal with them. Bt ee - Miss Park Reveals _ Caroline Cadbury Brown, ,of West- : Massachusetts (junior). Sophie Lee Hunt, of Kendal Green,| James E. Ruoaps Memoriat Junior Page Four eo ° THE COLLEGE NEWS ins yaad Wali CaCO Ne sn Ps Scholarship Awards \ --Continued from Page Three FOUNDATION SCHOLARSHIPS town, Pennsylvania (junfer). Elizabeth Hope Wickersham, of _ Ventnor, New Jersey (junior). Scholarship awarded to a member | of the Freshman Class to be held for three years: LEILA HOUGHTELING MEMORIAL SCHOL- ARSHIP Mary Cunningham, Sands, .of Chi- cugo,. Illinois (fréshman). ALUMNAE REGIONAL ‘ SCHOLARSHIPS (arranged geographically by districts and in order of rank in class under each district) NEw ENGLAND Barbara Merchant, of Gloucester, Massachusetts (junior). Margaret Carolyn Wylie, of Dor- chester, Massachusetts (jun- ior). Elizabeth Duncan‘ Lyle, of Lenox, Massachusetts (sophomore). Mary Elizabeth Reed, of Norwich, Connecticut (sophomore). Elizabeth King Simeon, of Provi- dence, Rhode Island. (fresh-’ man). Dorothea Chambers Seelye, of Northampton, Massachusetts (freshman). Doris Droste Frank, of Hartford, Connecticut (freshman). Sylvia Wright, of Cambridge, Mass- achusetts (freshman). NEW YORK Betty Bock, of Buffalo, New York (junior). Celentha Evelyn Brooklyn, New~ York —; Ellen Brooks Newton, of New York (freshman). NEW JERSEY Margaret Cecelia Honour, of East Orange, New Jersey (junior). Alice Russell Raynor, of Yonkers, New York (junior). Elizabeth Jane Simpson, of Eliza- beth, New Jersey (sophomore). Ann Keay, of Short Hills, New Jer- sey (freshman). EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA AND DELA- WARE -Louise Atherton Dickey, of Oxford, Pennsylvania (sophomore). Gretchen Priscilla Collie, of Ger- mantown, Philadelphia. DISTRICT V Esther Bassoe, of Evanston, Illi- nois (junior). Margaret Robinson Lacy, of Du- buque, Iowa (sgphomore). Elizabeth Fabian wre, of Evan- ston, Illinois (freshnfan). : j District VI Virginia Ferrel Hessing, of St. Louis; Missouri (freshman). Aaronson, of (fresh- Scholarships to be Held in the Sophomore Year MARIA HopPER SCHOLARSHIP Virginia Ferrel Hessing, Louis, Missouri, JAMES BE, RHOADES MEMORIAL SOPHO- MORE SCHOLARSHIP Dewilda Ellen Naramore, of Bronx- ville, New York. SECOND MARIA HopPpER SCHOLARSHIP Mary Boone Staples, of Richmond, Virginia. ELLEN A. MURTER MEMORIAL SOPHO- MORE SCHOLARSHIP Mary Teleki Mesier, of Farming- dale, Long Island, New York. ELIZABETH WILSON WHITE MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP (awarded by the President) Fanny Robinson Hoxton, of Univer- sity, Virginia. SECOND ELLEN A. MURTER MEMORIAL SOPHOMORE SCHOLARSHIP Grace Alison Raymond, of Litch- field, Connecticut, . THIRD ELLEN A. MURTER MFMORIAL SOPHOMORE SCHOLARSHIP Ann Conway Fred, of Madison, Wis- consin. OL St: Scholarships to be Held in the Junior Year EVELYN HUNT SCHOLARSHIP Louise Atherton Dickey, af Oxford, Pennsylvania. ’ ANNA HALLOWELL MEMORIAL SCHOL- ARSHIP ; - Cornelia Ann Wyckoff, of New York. - \ Kathryn Moss Jacoby, vof New] Glee Club Tickets ‘Get your Glee Club tickets from-.-the . Publication Office from 1.30 to 2.00 every day. There are still. good seats to * be had for both performances. Mary E.. STEVENS .: SCHOLARSHIP (awarded by ‘the President) Anne Bowen Edwards, of McDon- ogh, Maryland. SECOND EVELYN HUNT SCHOLARSHIP Margaret Robinson Lacy, of Du- buque, Iowa, LILA M. WRIGHT ‘-MEMQRIAL SCHOLAR- SHIP Eleanore Flora Tobin, of Chicago, Illinois. ELLEN -MURTER MEMORIAL JUNIOR SCHOLARSHIP Amelia Kennard Wright, of Easton, Maryland. ‘ ABBY SLADE BRAYTON DURFEE SCHOL- ARSHIP Mary Hinckley Hutchings, of Bos- ton, Massachusetts. Book SHOP SCHOLARSHIP AND SHOBER CAREY AWARD Lucy Huxley Kimberly, of Balti- more, Maryland. SUSAN MEMORIAL Scholarships to be Held in the Senior Year Maria L. EASTMAN BROOKE HALL MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP awarded “each year on_ the ground of scholarship to the member of the junior class with the highest average Elizabeth Porter Wyckoff, of New York. PROFESSOR JAMES H, LEUBA SCHOLAR- SHIP : Betty Bock, of Buffalo, New York. AMELIA RICHARDS SCHOLARSHIP. (awarded by the President) Barbara Merchant, of Gloucester, Massachusetts. SECOND Proressor JAMES H. LEUBA SCHOLARSHIP Lillie Edna Rice, of Philadelphia. Mary ANNA LONGSTRETH MEMORIAL *SCHOLARSHIP ; Marcia Lee Anderson, of Durham, North Carolina. ‘ Mary McLEAN MEMORIAL SENIOR SCHOLARSHIP Virginia Harper Sale, of Buffalo, New York. ANNA Powers MEMORIAL SCHOLAR- SHIP Margaret Cecelia Honour, of East Orange, New Jersey. THomas H. POWERS MEMORIAL SCHOL- ARSHIP Frances Calloway Porcher, of Co- coa, Florida. SECOND AMELIA RICHARDS SCHOLAR- SHIP Anne Elizabeth Reese, of Baltimore, Maryland. ANNA 'M. POWERS MEMORIAL SCHOL- ARSHIP Alicia Belgrano Stewart, of Wash- ington, D.C. CONSTANCE LEWIS MEMORIAL SCHOL- ARSHIP Sophie Lee Hunt, of Kendal Green, Massachusetts. SEcoND Mary McLEAN MEMORIAL SENIOR SCHOLARSHIP Alice Hagedorn Cohen, burgh, Pennsylvania. ALICE FERREE HAYT MEMORIAL SCHOL- ARSHIP AND ALICE FERREE HAYT MEMORIAL AWARD Alice: Russell Raynor, of Yonkers, New York. GEORGE BATES HOPKINS MEMORIAL _s SCHOLARSHIP IN MUSIC Maryallis Morgan, | of Wyncote, Pennsylvania. of Pitts- Scholarships Awarded for Distinction) in a Special Subject SHEELAH KILROY MEMORIAL SCHOLAR- SHIP IN ENGLISH, awarded for excellence of work in Required English Composition Mary Teleki Mesier, of Farming- dale, New York (freshman). SUMMER FRENCH sear Residential Summer School (co-educational) in the heart of French Canada. Old French spoken. ‘Elementary, Intermediate, Advanced. Cer- tificate or College Credit. French entertainments, sight- seeing, rts, etc. ee Fee $150, Board and Tuition. June 27-Aug. 1. Write for cir- -cular to Secretary, Residen- tial French Summer School. McGILL UNIVERSITY MONTREAL, CANADA Country French staff. Only # SHEELAH KILROY. MEMORIAL SCHOLAR- SHIP IN ENGLISH, awarded for excellence of work in I Year English fg Elizabeth Duncan Lyle, . of Lenox, Massachusetts (sophomore). ELIZABETH S. SHIPPEN SCHOLARSHIP IN SCIENCE; awarded for excel- lence of work. in’ science Marion Louise Bridgman, of: New Canaan, Connecticut (junior). ELIZABETH DUANE GILLESPIE SCHOL- ARSHIP IN “AMERICAN HISTORY, awarded for excellence of schol- arship in American History. * Edith Gould Anderson, of Brooklyn, New York (junior). SHEELAH KILROY MEMORIAL SCHOLAR- SHIP IN ENGLISH, awarded for excellence of work in Advanced English Margaret Cecelia Honour, of East Orange, New Jersey (junior). ELIZABETH S. SHIPPEN SCHOLARSHIP IN FOREIGN LANGUAGES, award- ed for excellence of work in a foreign language - Jean Holzworth, of Port Chester, New York (junior). Those who were nominated by their departments for the Charles §. Hinch- man Memorial Scholarship were: Jean Holzworth in Latin Barbara Merchant in Archaeology Ellen Balch Stone in Economics Elizabeth Porter Wyckoff in Greek CHARLES S. HINCHMAN MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP, awarded to the student whose record shows the greatest ability in her major subject Elizabeth Porter Wyckoff, of New York (junior). Prizes to Members of the Senior Class PRESIDENT M. CAREY THOMAS ESSAY PRIZE, awarded to the student whose writing in the opinion of the English Department is the best in the Senior Class Elizabeth Kent, of Brookline, Mas- sachusetts, and Evelyn Hastings Thompson, of Brookline, Massachusetts. MARTIN DONNELLY POETRY PRIZE, given this year as a spe- cial honor Gertrude Van Vranken Franchot, of Boston, Massachusetts. * Continued on Page Six Lucy . Theater Review Ernest Truex*and Company are opening on Broadway in a new play which is billed as a comedy. It was written by Stephen Gross and Jack Lait, and the cast includes Edith Tali- ferro, Helen Lynd, Frederick Howard and Mr. Truex’s’son, Philip. The plot, .a satire on. radio (which, in itself, does not seem particularly revolutionary), nevertheless is based on an idea that had possibilities of developing into something as hilarious as Once In A Lifetime; but the manner in-which it is presented is anything but novel. * Mr. Truex plays the part of Victor Vance or “Uncle Abe,’ a homey phil- osopher of the air-waves. He wanders into a conference at which a search is in progress for a program to adver- tise the product of the wealthy, but conservative manufacturer of Ponce .de Leon pills. . Choir Appointment Lois. Marean, ’37, has been chosen. Choir ~Manager for 1935-386. Since Uncle Abe is a typical middle-aged character, atid since Ponce de Leon pills have the ef- fect of wappaeiet ~~ — users, it is decided that“Victor Vance is the ideal star to advertise them. He will dem- onstrate to a vast radio audience, five nights a week, that romance need not be absent from the lives of old’ men who are faithful in their use of Ponce | de Leon pills. | In order convince anyone who might be skeptical about the remark- able effect of his product, the manu- facturer arranges to have Uncle Abe marry his young ward, Orphan Nell, in a great public ceremony broadcast from coast to coast. Because- under no other conditions will the manufac- turer ‘sign the contract for the series of programs, Victor Vance agrees to go through with the bona-fide wed- ding, although he is forced to sneak off and divorce his devoted wife be- fore he can marry his young co-star. To make matters more complicated, Orphan Nell (played by Helen Lynd) is revealed as an ambitious, shrill, per- oxided shrew, who becomes attached to’ their sponsor in order to outwit Uncle Abe and to achieve greater prominence for herself. in radio. In the end, Uncle Abe manages to in- validate their wedding by a simple feat of léger de main performed on the officiating bishop, who is afflicted with mike-fright. This accomplish- ment forms the weakest dénoument and.the most ineffective curtain that have graced an Ernest Truex play for many a year. The management made its appear- ance’ on the stage of the Broad The- atre Thursday night, to explain that a scene of the play had been cut out, and that the number of acts had been reduced from three to two. At least two of the spectators felt that the scene which immediately followed this announcement could have been left out also without doing any damage to the production other than making the play much too short. This scene takes place in the penthouse, presumably, of Orphan Nell the night before her wed- ding. It gives Helen Lynd a chance to wear some tight-fitting green satin lounging pajamas, threaten | suicide; and reduce her sponsor to a weakened condition, during which she calls him Daddy, and he merely looks pained. Beyond this, it enables the audience to become more familiar with Miss Lynd’s high and raucous voice, which is doubtless supposed to be an exam- ple of the feminine voices on the av- erage radio program. The acting, for the most part, was distinguished for great exaggeration, amounting to hamishness in some of the minor comic parts, All in all, how- ever, Mr. Truex restrained himself Ardmore 2048 — Bryn Mawr 2418 - BRILL—Flowers MARTY BRILL 46 West Lancaster Avenue Ardmore 822 Lancaster Avenue « Bryn Mawr perhaps! \ it’s somebody’s birthday! Somewhere, someone is having a birthday to- day —a friend of yours Reach her by telephone. She’d more than welcome your spoken greetings be- cause your voice is you! remarkably. well; and some of .the’ over-enthusiasm of the. rest of the company can be attributed to a mati- née complex, or to Ye great open spaces in the house, va Condon, as Mother “Bryce, Orphan Nell’s mother, gave a lovely, sentimental perform- ance in a very small-feminine Victor Moore part. There: were one or two very amusing remarks, much appreci- ated by the Philadelphia audience, and three or four very old ones. The first scene of the first act was rather prom- ising, but for the rest, we’d like to see what Percy Hammond has to say. ee Guy Marriner Discusses, Plays Modern Composers ¢ Continued from Page One ninth, and eleventh applied to. the whole-tone scale which was probably derived from the Japanese music that he heard in the Paris Exposition of 1889. Mr, Marriner illustrated these theories by the Toccata and the Clair de lune, in which the chords are played in whole-tone succession with- out any attempt at resolution, the har- mony being produced by decoration and technique. In the Gardens in the Rain Debussy experimented with brok- en chords based on the seventh and thirteenth instead of the conventional triad. Debussy also employed the penta- tonic scale which is to be found in primitive music all over the world. This scale.is formed by eliminating the semitones between the third and the fourth, and the seventh and the eighth degrees of the scale. In the Girl with the Flaxen Hair, Mr. Marri- ner showed how Debussy had employ- ed this scale effectively by using rhythmic variety to relieve monotony resulting from the use of only five notes. Mr. Marriner played the Little Litanies Of Jesus, by Gabriel Grovlez. One of Debussy’s greatest concep- tions, the Submerged Castle, is writ- ten in organum, a very old form in- volving the use of open chords of the fifth and sixth which more modern rules absolutely forbid. Continued on Page Hight Meet your friends at the Bryn Mawr Confectionery (Next to Seville Theater Bldg.) The Rendezvous of the College Girls Tasty Sandwiches, Delicious Sundaes, Superior Soda Service Music—Dancing for girls only NOW! America treats you‘to new luxuries in / TOURIST CLASS TO EUROPE , \ v3 VERY I Low i FARES : @ The magnificent swimming pool pic- tured above is only one of the amazing Tourist Class luxuries offered by America’s new sensations of the sea! The Wash- ington and Marhattan, America’s fastest liners, are completely modern, pipsiaing every modern feature known to sea travel, including the supreme luxury: air-condi- tioned dining salons (an exclusive fea- ture in thé service)! : Because they were built to suit the smart American taste —because they do suit it—these liners have set enviable popularity records! This summer, sail on them and see for yourself what unprece- dented value, what delightful good times they offer! The Tourist Class fare is only $204 round trip! If you wish to travel in the best class on the ship and yet at a modest fare, then the very popular Pres. Harding and Pres. Roosevelt merit your consideration. Cabin Class—highest on the ship—features ease, comfort and geniality—finest cabins, top decks and the fare is only $234 round These four fine liners sail weekly to Cobh, Plymouth, Havre and Hamburg. Fares slightly higher between June 10 and July 8. Apply to your travel agent. His services are free. - Associated with American Merchant and Balti- more Mail Lines to Europe; Panama Pacific Line to California; Panama Pacih U.S. Lines Cruises. \. 1620 Walnut St., Philadelphia gh Mi ee \ a Fy, __ x e _ terned intervals his ee THE COLLEGE NEWS. ‘Page Five MacLeish Reads Pret ' Taken From Own Work «Continued from Page ‘One as he was, wrote another history of the conquest — the true history, as those saw it who had bled in its bat- tles. As an artistie performance the book is a failure; as a living monu- ment it is thrilling; and from. this aspect of it came the material for Conquistador. : In the preface. to Conquistador Ber- nal Diaz is remembering for the first time in many' years all his dead com- panions and their dead days; at pat- memories are crossed: by hiS “living indignation against Gomara’s pedantic impudence. The lines here are uneven with un- even thought; they are full of shift- ing ideas, and of vagueness clarified now and again by strong recollection; they are wandering and repetitious like an old man’s talking. As Mr. MacLeish read them, his voice as- sumed somewhat the character and emotion of Diaz, so that he made the old man live as if in a play, yet at the same time he maintained by an unbroken, rhythmic flow of sound, the impersonal form of the poem. Contrasting with the dim confusion of the preface, Mr. MacLeish’s verses from a later part\of Conquistador, where he described Colua, the Mexi- can city, were clear and quiet. Then Bernal Diaz was happy, and the city was beautiful. The words which he supposedly spoke tell of bright sun and water, cool nights and_ sleepy noons, and the smell of growing earth. In Mr. MacLeish’s reading, the long cadences made a strong simple music like that of a Hebrew psalm. The Hamlet of A. MacLeish is a poem of which the author did not ap- prove; nevertheless, he gave a selec- tion from it because it is typical of a whole’ generation who have experi- enced the same problems and the same reactions that Hamlet experienced. The background for the poem is the French Riviera, and its skeletal struc- ture is that of the play, Hamlet. It is simply clothed with personal psy- chology gather than * Shakespeare’s imaginings. Mr. MacLeish’s _ sélec- tion was a scene parallel to the ghost scene in the actual play. Instead of an apparition of a king, the ghost is some intangible horror, whose pres- ence can be sensed waiting in the night, hiding behind words, half re- vealing itself inpmusic or in faces, yet never quite .perceived’ and_ identified. In conformity to the bewildered, er- ratic thoughts df Mr. MacLeish as Hamlet, the poem is written in be- wildered, erratic phrases which con- yey nothing definite, only the sense of | some terror standing unseen, but very near, Lines.For A Prologue were in the same subjective manner, and in the same way expressed a sensation rath- er than an idea. , Although Mr. Mac- Leish spoke objectively again in Cine- ma of A Man, he gave a picture seen clearly but unthinkingly, rather than an analytical ‘observation and conclu- sion. In Corporate Entity, however, his method changed entirely. He be- came humorous and slyly satirical. There is a strange legal fantasy, he explained, which exists in this coun- try, and is indeed one of the bases of our civilization, to the effect that a corporation possesses a soul capable of separate existence. By means of this convenient conception, a company is enabled to perform business of somewhat doubtful legality without casting blame upon the “Secretary, Treasurer, President, Directors or Ma- jority stockholders.” Another Amer- ican fantasy is the expectation of a great national novel. To mock this feeble hope, Mr. MacLeish read Criti- cal Observations, ironically exhorting his hearers: “Let us await the great. American novel!” Verses For A Centennial put to scorn one more idiosyncrasy of our countrymen who delight in commem- orating with foolish ceremonies ‘the anniversaries of famous dead. Returning to a serious mood, Mr. MacLeish read Memory Green and its sequels, Not Marble Nor the Gilded ‘Monuments and. Unfinished. History. The first two poems are in praise of love and the beauty of women, but the last one inquires with dread what may come after love. Only Not Marble Nor the Gilded Monuments had any |. rhyme scheme, and the pattern here was slight and free; yet in all three poems the meter was carefully adjust- ed to the grave emotion, or in turn to the light loveliness of a young girl. For he , “Sprang the obstinate words to the * .. bones of her breast, | ‘And the stubborn line to her young stride, and the breath to her breathing, And the beat t haste.” Before Mr. acLeish. read the chorus of his new play,Panie,-he~ad- monished the audience that it was the duty of all coming writers to find a verse form fit for the stage, and an action of sufficient dignity to sustain verse successfully. Then he explained that Panic was written about the time two years ago when all the banks of the country were closing, and America’s financial pulse stood still in impotence and dread. The story of the poem arises from the conflict be- tween the self-reliance habitual to a great capitalist and the blind fear sud- denly facing him. On the stage, both the sumptuous office of the protag- onist and the street where a crowd have gathered to watch an. electric news bulletin are shown at once. Mr. MacLeish spoke the lines in which the crowd begins to speak in dis- jointed syllables—“Close—foreclosing —the doors—closing, foreclosing,” un- til separate voices are distinguished, each telling in its own way of the change and desolation in the land. Here, as in-so many of his poems, Mr. MacLeish has captured the feeling of the irresistible growth of crops, the alte... les ala... i. i. sai, te cle. EVENING DRESSES Mousseline de Soie and Chiffon PERFUME for MOTHER’S DAY Special, 39¢ dram FRANCES O’CONNELL { Bryn Mawr French Club Elections The French Club takes pleas- ure in announcing the election — of Mary Hinckley Hutchings, 37, as’ President. and Dewilda ' Naramore, ’88, as Secretary- Treasurer for 1935-36. long path of the wind, and the turn- ing of earth, That vitality was stronger in his chorus than was the panic. Many of his poems also have the characteristic of protesting against the smug satisfaction, the usurped honor, tha undeserved well-being of kings and conquerors and .statesmen, while those humble men who really accomplished the glory starve and are forgotten. Frescoes for Mr. Rockefel- ler’s City are drawn to express ,the same. protest, but. mockingly rather than angrily. Yet Mr. MacLeish does not reject his love of country because he thinks such capitalists and states- men come into unjust possession of it. He read Landscape As’A Nude, which is his. picture of America in the West; She is a lovely land; “She has- brown breasts, country?” « Terror Against Students In spite of repress! geggepsures tak- en by school administrative authori- ties, approximately 150,000. students in the United States struck against War and Fascism on April 12. From California to New York attempts were made to lessen the effectiveness of this : protest by police brutality and other tactics. At Crane Junior College in Chicago 13 students were arre, for distrib- uting leaflets. One st t was beaten by two thugs. Two students at Los Angeles ‘were clubbed into uncon- sciousness and several suspended. JEANNETT’S BRYN MAWR FLOWER SHOP, Inc. Mrs, N. S. .T. Grammer 823 Lancaster Avenue BRYN MAWR, PA. Phone 570 TWO TEARFUL DOLPHINS » WHO CAN'T GO 5S.T.C.A.: They have to swim to Europe. . you can go on the famous liners of the Holland- eee S. S. STATENDAM -JUNE 4; JUNE 25; JULY 16. m., 5. S. VEENDAM JUNE 15; JULY 13. STCA America Line and have fun all the way over. TheS.T.C.A. way is the college way and costs as little as $144.50 (Third Class), $191.00 (Tourist Class) over and back! S.T.C. A. COLLEGE TOURS are planned so you can see Europe with college people. 30 days . . $435. 40days.... 625. oan... oe * Full details from Miss Mary Louise Van Vechten HOLLAND-AMERICA LINE 29 Broadway New York © 1935, Liccetr & Myers Tosacco Co, % + , ran is no need for a lot of whangdoodle talk about cigarettes look at it— to Satisfy. Scientific methods and ripe mild to- baccos make Chesterfield a milder and better-tasting cigarette. We believe you will enjoy them. — just plain common-sense When you stop to think about your cigarette—what it means to you — here’s about the way you Smoking a cigarette gives a lot of pleasure —it always has. People have been smoking and . enjoying tobacco in some form or another for over 400 years. Of course you want a cigarette to be made right. And naturally you want it to be mild. Yet you want it to have the right taste — and plenty of it. In other words—you. want it and the mouth of no other _ SO mera Page Six : pf wt ‘THE COLLEGE NEWS —oh. e — e Dennis Dance Group Gives Varied Recital : Continued from Page One ment. The dancers were graceful and charming in their flowing cos-. tumes and handled their garlands with. skill. They moved from one pattern to another with no break in the continuity of the piece, and none of the sentimentality which some- times characterizes a dance of that period. In the first excerpt from the Clas- sical Symphony, Miss Dennis danced with an expert feeling for accent in music. The next excerpt, however, was inspired, because Miss Dennis again caught the fantastic humor of the composer Prokofieff, as she did in Love For Three Oranges. The second part of the program contained two widely different dances, En Saga by Sibelius, and On The Green done to rhythms clapped by the hands and feet of the chorus and “‘dancers. En Saga “an abstract bal- let,” sustained a feeling of religious exaltation throughout the first and second parts. Pattern, opposition of movement, the beat of the dancers ' feet, and the accent of their heads contributed to the kind of primitive excitement felt in the chorus called “Le Sacre Du Printemps.” The deep purple of the costumes of the group and the dead white of Miss Dennis’ face against the black curtain pre- sented a striking picture. The golden costume which Miss Dennis wore in the third part was designed for her and not by her as the others had been, and lacked the sure touch of her own creations. On The Green was. a clever and amusing character dance performed by Estelle Dennis, Mary La Motte, Dorothea Brinkmann, Ruth Pettit and Charlétte Broekel. The dancers, attired as- children, used claps and stamps of the feet for rhythmic beat in place of music. Miss Dennis, as a flirtatious young maid, added a touch of rustic comedy. Devidassi and Sombar, one an im- pression of oriental dancing by Char- lotte Broekel and the Concert Group, the other a Gypsy dance by Miss Dennis, were least interesting of the numbers presented, possibly because they were impressions of a technique not native to the group. Miss Dennis’ costume for Impres- sions of a Night Club was perfect. It had the same effect as Agua En- ters’ chartreuse gloves in Absinthe. Her dance also had this quality, al- though the chorus was rather too literal to be satiric. _ Rhapsody, to music by Dohnanyi, was a fitting end to the program, and the climax of the evening. The chorus was- costumed in wine red, Miss Dennis in white. The dance really expressed the stated motif— “the struggle of an ideal with con- flicting emotions.” It was well plan- ned, well lighted and costumed, and concluded with a striking group pose. Particularly worthy of comment was Miss Dennis’ selection and use of music in the whole program. The symphonic numbers were made avail- able by amplification of orchestral records. Her interpretations were not only faithful rhythmically and melodically, but they caught the mood of the composer unfailingly. Of the individual dancers who de- serve mention, perhaps the most out- standing was Miss Brinkmann. The group as a whole is made up of young dancers. With youth, intelli-, gence, a willingness to accept good ideas and movements from all schools of the Modern Dance, Estelle Dennis and her Concert Group wilt be worth watching. Miss Park Reveals Scholarship Awards Continued from Page Four _ HISTORY NON-RESIDENT Elizabeth Webb* Chaney, A.B., Swarthmore College, to be con- ferred, 1935. ITALIAN E. Katharine Tilton, A.B., Wellesley College, 1928; M.A., Radcliffe College, 1931. Graduate Stu- dent, University of Florence, 1928-29; Graduate Student, Radcliffe College, 1930-32; Part-time Instructor in Italian and Graduate Student, Bryn Mawr College, 1932-34. La Western: Reserve 1988;....M.A.,-- 1934, Student, Western Reserve Uni- versity, 1933-84; Graduate Scholar in Latin, Bryn Mawr College, 1934-35. Barbara |. Eleanor Queen’s University, Scholar in - Classics, University, 1934-35. MATHEMATICS Anna Margaret Catherine Grant, %B.A., Dalhousie © University, 1925. Graduate Student in BAG; 1934. Brown, ; Mathematics and Physics, Bryn} $ Mawr College, 1931-34. Marion Belle Greenebaum, A.B., ‘ Barnard College, to be confer- red, 1935. ' PHILOSOPHY Allegra Claire’ Montgomery, A.B., University of Illinois, to be con- ferred, 1935. PHYSICS Pauline Rolf, A.B., University of Cincinnati, 1934. Graduate Student, University of Cincin- nati, 1934-35. PSYCHOLOGY Eleanor Murdoch Chalfant, A.B., Bryn Mawr College, 1933.. Stu- dent, Philadelphia School of Occupational Therapy, 1933-35. SocraL EcoNOMY CAROLA WOERISHOFFER SCHOLAR- SHIPS Dorothy Stuart Clapp, A.B., Ober- lin College, to be . conferred, 1935. Eleanor Elizabeth Reid, B.A., Me- Gill University, to be conferred, 1935. NON-RESIDENT ‘Helen Lewis, A.B., Ursinus College, 1934. Graduate Student in So- cial Economy, Bryn Mawr Col- lege, 1934-35. Jean Liberty Pennock, A.B., Con-|- necticut College, 1933. Social Worker, Philadelphia County Relief Board, 1934-35. SPANISH Mary Stedman Sweeney, A.B., Rad- cliffe College, 1917; M.A., 1922. Graduate Student, Radcliffe College, 1924-25 and 1929-30; Fellow in Spanish, Bryn Mawr College, 1927-28; Student, Uni- versidad Central, Madrid, 1928- 29; Part-time Instructor and Graduate Student in Spanish, Bryn Mawr College, 1930-31; Representative, International Institute for Girls in Spain, Madrid, 1931-34; ~~ Graduate Scholar in Spanish, Bryn Mawr College, 1934-35. Fellowship and Scholarship Awards Dr. Alga Taussky, Foreign Scholar in Mathematics at Bryn Mawr, will study at Girton College, Cambridge, next year on -the Alfred Yarrow. Scientific Re- search Fellowship. This Fel- lowship was awarded to Miss Taussky for a period of three years (1934-37). Ruth Whittredge, Fellow in French, has been awarded the Fanny Bullock Workman Fellowship by Wellesley College. Miss Whittredge will study in-Paris. Catherine Robinson, Senior — Resi- dent of Radnor Hall, has receiv- ed a fellowship through the In- stitute of International Educa- tion for study at the University of Paris. Grace Comans, Scholar in German, has received a _ fellowship through the Institute of Inter- national Education for study in Germany next winter. Emily Grace, Fellow in Greek, has received a University Scholar- ship for study in the Depart- ment of Greek, at Yale Univer- sity next year. FRANCES ROBINSON- DUF F oavis'sri asco DRAMATIC INSTRUCTION Acquire, professional technique in the interpretation of dramatic roles for stage, screen and radio, under this famous coach. Teacher of Ina Claire, Helen Hayes, Katharine Hepburn, Jane Wyatt, Osgood Per- kins, Douglas Montgomery, Clark Gable,» Kenneth MacKenna and mary.-other stars.: - - SUMMER COURSES (All Courses in New York - City) BEGINNERS’ CLASS, July 8 ADVANCED CLASS, July 9 Students may take ‘both courses simultaneously. Those enrolling for Advanced Class’ are required to take Beginners’ Class. Special Courses for Teachers.and é Lecturers WRITE FOR LITERATURE TIN Rosamund Esther Deutsch, A.B., University, ‘Graduate |. Queen’s |’ Susan Savage, Fellow in Latin, has been awarded The. Bennett Fel- lowship. aty the University of Pennsylvania. Sylvia Rouse, Scholar in Biology, ] . has received © the © Dorothy Frances. Rice Scholarship. given by the Biological Laboratory of Cold Spring Harbor for work there this summer. Teaching Appointments Anna Janney DeArmond, Scholar in English, has been appointed Substitute Instructor in Eng- lish at Sweet Briar College for next year. Sarah Ramage, graduate student in English, has been appointed Substitute Instructor in’ Eng- lish at Sweet Briar College for next year. ' Grace Shover, Emmy Noether Fellow in Mathematics, will be Assistant Teacher of Mathe- matics, at The Shipley School. Ruth Stauffer, Scholar of the So- ciety of, Pennsylvania Women - in New York, will be Teacher of Mathematics at The Bryn Mawr School in Baltimore. *. Marie Weiss, Emmy Noethe Scholar in Mathematics, will re- turn to her post of Assistan Professor of Mathematics at Newcomb College. Catherine Bill, of the Senior Class, has been appointed through the Institute of International Edu- cation to the post of Assistante Dr. d’Anglais in the Lycée de Jeunes Filles at Bour-en- Bresse. This is the Lycée of which. Mlle. Pardé. is. the Di- rectrice. Ethel Glancy has been awarded a teaching fellowship in Biology at Washington Square College. New York University, for 1935. 36. Jean Morrison has been awarded a Graduate Fellowship in History at Radcliffe College for 1935- 36. Honors Received by Bryn Mawr Faas Helen Patch, Ph.D., has been ap- pointed Head of the Depart- ment of Romance Languages at Mount Holyoke ‘College to re- place the present head of the department, who-‘has reached the retiring age. | seen nena cee Ce _ (ZOMETHING like orchestral playing is this running of ships across the ocean—a special aptitude for ensemble work required of all members . . . You find it on German Ships: Every steward, seaman, officer born to a part, trained by years in working in unison. Ships and equipment as fine as can be made, kept in perfect order. And a tradition that has its hand on every shoulder, day and night. Fastest Way to France, England, Germany— Bremen - Europa The de luxe Columbus leaves June 29 — the Special Student Sailing—for Ireland, Eng- land, France, Germany, and every Wednesday Midnight a sailing of the “Famous Four’ New York . . Deutschland ffamburg . . Albert Ballin Cabin Liners St. Louis .. Berlin . . Stuttgart to Ireland, England, France, Germany, ~ Undergraduate, Quota The total sum which has been pledged up to. date for the Un- dergraduate Quota of the Mil- lion Dollar Drive is $15,520. Mary. Zelia Pease, Ph.D., 1933, in addition to the Alice Freeman Palmer: Fellowship, which she received from the American Association of University Wom- en, has also received a grant of $400 from the American Coun- cil of Learned Societies. Bryn Mawr College Scholarship Annourtcements for 1935-36 Scholarships held at® Bryn Mawr College but not in the Award: of the College: STATE SCHOLARSHIP Caroline Cadbury Brown,‘ of West- town, Pennsylvania (junior). CITY SCHOLARSHIP Kathryn Swain Docker, of German- town, Philadelphia (junior). Scholarships Awarded by the Col- lege at Entrance to be Held for All Four Years: TRUSTEES’ SCHOLARSHIPS Lillie Edna Rice, of Philadelphia (junior). Suzanne Williams, of Richmond, In- diana (freshman). Gretchen Priscilla Collie, of Ger- mantown, Philadelphia (fresh- ~ man). Bertha Goldstein, of Philadelphia (freshman). : t.owrr MERION HIGH SCHOOL SCHOL- ARSHIP Elizabeth Smedley, of Narberth, Pennsylvania (junior). NORRISTOWN, HAVERFORD TOWNSHIP AND RADNOR TOWNSHIP HIGH SCHOOL SCHOLARSHIPS Josephine Bond Ham, of St. Davids, Pennsylvania (sophomore). GREEN HILL FARMS City. Line and Lancaster Ave.——+ A reminder that we would like to take care of your parents and friends, whenever they come to visit you. L. E. METCALF, Manager. Overbrook-Philadelphia ' Alice Chase, of Wayne, Pennsylva- nia (freshman) . I"RANCES MARION SIMPSON SCHOLAR- — SHIPS Rose ‘Goddard Davis, of Cheshire, Connecticut (junior). Virginia Dorsey, of Germantown, Philadelphia (sophomore). Five Tuition Scholarships awarded through the Institute of International Education, for summer study in Ger- many: At the University of Munich, Adelaide Davidsen, present scholar in Greek. Sarah: Helen Todd, 1936. At.the University of Heidelberg: Catherine Adams Bill, 1935. Louise Atherton Dickey, 1937. Jeannette Morrison, 1935. The Barbour Scholarship for Ori- ental Women at the University of Michigan Medical, School to be held for four years: - Vung Yuin Ting, 1935. States Pass Hearst Legislation , Arkansas, Delaware, Indiana, and Tennessee have passed bills, sponsored by Hearst, the American Legion and the Elks, which-will bar radical mi- nority parties from the ballot, Simi- lar laws are pending in eight other states. An “anti-sedition” bill has passed the Alabama lower house. Sev- eral anti-sedition bills carrying a pen- alty of 5 years’ imprisonment, also sponsored by Hearst and the Ameri- can Legion, are pending in Washing- ton.—(N. S. F. A.) School of Nursing of Yale University A Profession for the College Woman The thirty months’ course, pro- viding an intensive and varied ex- perience through the case study method, leads to the degree of MASTER OF NURSING A Bachelor’s degree in art, sci- ence or philosophy from a college of approved standing is. required for ad-nission. A few scholarships ‘available for students with ad- vanced qualifications. For catalog and information address: THE DEAN YALE SCHOOL OF NURSING New Haven Connecticut 9 4 | with me, Qa Hut sk you ac m a Geman & « NG ee What father really means is that crossing on a German Liner gives an opportunity for first-hand observation on what he terms “‘combin- ing the Science of Navigation with the Art of Fine Living.” Assistance and Advice to Students going abroad for travel or study. Write Educational Service Depart- ment, in any of our offices. Illustrated Literature on all Ships, all Classes. Your Local Travel Agent, ot -& fiamburg-Americani fine * North German floyd g 235 East 62nd St., New York, N.Y, win & sae po pberees 247 Park Avenue : : For catalogue of Summer Session ° » © ENCE........ 155 of the Vassar Dramatic Department; or. ofthe Two-year Diploma 36 W. Lancaster Ave. Burke Sisters H Angell Street Miss Comstock, of the economics de- partment at Mount Holyoke, conducts Course, address: The Director, School of Horticulture Box C, Ambler, Pennsylvania Ardmore, Pa. Ardmore 3594 ee elle atl att» Managing Director KATHARINE GIBBS SQUASH RACQUETS DIVING GEORGIA COLEMAN Winner, 13 National and Olympic Titles BASEBALL MELVIN OTT Slugger of the N.Y. Giants ‘ ‘ JOHN L. SKILLMAN ¢ 1935 Pro Squash 1 Racquets Champion SCULLING ' BILL MILLER 4 Times National Sculling Champion BASKETBALL JIM LANCASTER Captain, Undefeated 1934, N.Y. U. Violets GENE SARAZEN Famous Golf Champion aa The Philippine Her-. i ars es is for ye ked Came who has smo ship golfer, BOO s, BOO j e GENE SARAZEN; champ1o° _ The mild cigarette the athletes smoke as the mild cigarette for YOU! . — A cigarette so mild you can smoke all you want—that’s what athletes say about Camels. And when a champion talks about “condition” —“wind”—healthy nerves—real tobacco mildness—he’s got to know. Gene Sarazen says: “Playing as much as I do—I have to keep in condition. I smoke Camels steadily. They are so mild they never get my ‘wind’— never upset my nerves.” Other athletes back him, up....“I smoke all the Camels I want, and keep in top con- dition,” says Mel Ort, slugger of the New York Giants. ... Georgia Coleman, Olym pic diver, says: “Camels don’t cut down on my ‘wind.’”... Bill Miller, oarsman; Jim Lan- caster, N. Y. U.’s 1934 basketball captain; John Skillman, pro squash racquets cham- pion—hundreds of sports stars smoke Camels regularly and report that Camels never get/~ their “wind” or nerves. What this mildness means to you! ... It’ means you can smoke Camels all you want! Athletes have made this discovery: Camel’s costlier tobaccos are so mild, they can smoke all they please, without disturbing their “wind” or nerves. CONDITION IS IMPORTANT TO YOU TOO—on vacation, in college, at home. You can keep “in condition,” yet smoke all you please. — Athletes say: “Camels never gct your wind.” ft Q costiier | | | ‘TOBACCOS! | -@ Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS —Turkish and Domestic— than any other popular brand. : ; : : _".....( (Signed) R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, Winston-Salem, ‘N. C. —— es Se Loca eet: © 1985, B,J. Reynolds Tob. Co. : : Page Bight - a THE COLLEGE NEWS Co ~ Se ey Voice of Bryn Mayr May 6. The College News, Bryn Mawr Colleges Dear Editor: Now that the, pictures of thé } propos- ed Science Building have been publish- ed is there so little interest in Modern Architecture on the Campus that the Undergraduates are willing to accept this design without remonstrance? Is the “pioneering spirit of Bryn Mawr” and the “exploring, spirit of modern; science” to' be housed in a pseudo-Elizabethan Laboratory? Here is the first opportunity done: in collegiate axchitecture. Elizabethan group of buildings. problem. in a modern style? Sincerely, ELEANOR B. DAVIS. -ex ’20. Guy Marriner Discusses, Plays, Modern Composers Continued from Page Four Although Qebussy has contradicted all conventions,,Jre is a pure crafts- man, equally capable in all mediums, and always possessing fine taste and sensibility. Although, as in the case THE VANITY SHOP Vivian R. Noble—Hairdresser SHAMPOOING * MANICURING WAVING Bryn Mawr 1208 -nees, in many years to show what could be The building is to be outside the present. If Bryn Mawr really has a pioneering spirit, is this not the chance to show it architecturally by facing a modern " of his opera, Pelleas, he is not. al- ways understood by the public, “his general popularity has come much sooner than to most composers. De- hussy, because he is admired for his perfect art, helps to bridge the gap between the logical material world and the inexplicable realm of artistic modernism. \ “Mr. Marriner devoted the last few minutes of his lecture-recital to Ravel, a contemporary French composer, who was born in 1875, near the Pyre- avel is a master craftsman who has) much in common with De- bussy, “but is.more daringly revolu- tionary in both harmony and rhythm. Particularly remarkable is his use’of the major seventh, which has a prick- ing metallic sound. This harsh effect is either used by itself or modified by being’ surrounded by softening modu- lations. Ravel, probably because of his experiences in the war, has an unusually ironical humor which is continually revealing itself. In the Sonatina and the Minuet, which Mr. Marriner ‘played, Ravel is scrupu- lously faithful to the prescribed clas- sical form, but the modern atmosphere ereeps into: it in his unusual modern’ cadences and pentatonic effect. Luncheon 40c - 50c - 75c Telephone: Bryn Mawr 386 BRYN MAWR COLLEGE INN. TEA ROOM | THEATRE REVIEW Accent On Youth is a very amus- ing and highly improbable comedy satirizing in one breath elderly play- wrights and young college athletes. The essential conflict on which the ac- tion is based comes ftom the strug- gles of a playwright and a Princeton man for the affections of Constance Cummings, who takes the part of Linda Brown, a young secretary who has become an actress. Nicholas Hannen plays the role of Stephen. Gaye, a successful writer of comedies who turns out’ a drama about old loves, in his fiftieth year, which proves too cunvincing for the author and the cast. Everyone be- comes obsessed by the idea that a young woman may prefer an old man as a husband to one of her contem- poraries; and turns to Linda Brown, the star of the play, as the natural victim of*their emotional quandry. |The mix-up which results, prompts Linda to run away with the juvenile and then. turn from him to. her old, hero, the playwright. Irene Purcell, who has a small part as a smart and attractive,actress, one of Stephen Gaye’s former loves, acts capably and.contributes much of the Dinner 85c - $1.25 Meals a la carte and table d’hote Daily and Sunday 8.30 A. M. to 7.30 P. M. Afternoon Teas BRIDGE, DINNER PARTIES AND TEAS MAY BE ARRANGED | MEALS SERVED ON THE TERRACE WHEN WEATHER PERMITS THE PUBLIC IS INVITED | Miss Sarah Davis, Manager i entertainment. in the first and third acts. Theodore Newton, Princeton ’25, plays Dickie, the Princeton ex-athlete and| juvenile lead of Stephen’s play, and (receives a great deal of sophisti- cated abuse. The main fault of the play is the treatment of the character of Dickie, who is made ineffectual but sympathetic in the first two acts, be- comes active and wins his lady by the time the curtain drops on the second ridiculous act, and finally is made throyghout the third act. Notwithstanding this flaw, and -the fact that the whole play is as im- probable as an issue of The New PEIRCE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION College'\Women may begin courses in Secretarial Training at the open- ing of the Summer. Sessions of six weeks, commencing July First. PHILADELPHIA ee Oe Maison Marcel 853 Lancaster Avenue | Permanent Waves » $8.00 Complete | including Manicure MONSIEUR RENE MARCEL IN ATTENDANCE Bryn Mawr 2060 Graduation Special Yorker, Accent On Youth is, on the ‘whole,...a well-constructed. light com- edy, full of amusing lines, such as the one which convulsed the Bryn Mawr section of the audience: ‘Look here! This is the United States of America, not Princeton.” Its ending is amus- ing and original enough not to suffer disclosure here. dy i “FLOATING UNIVERSITY” _ CRUISE During July and August to the. MEDITERRANEAN Here is the ideal trip for students—a splendid opportunity to derive the greatest benefits from your summer vacation and enjoya wonderful] travel adventure. Visit Egypt,the H and, Russia—17 countries and islands in the “cradle of civilization” with the lux- urious tropical cruiser §.8. SLAMAT as your floating campus. Return on the magnificent 8.8. BERENGARIA. EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM > ‘Prominent professors will give stand- ard university summer coursesinArt, Economics, Government, History, Literature and other ‘sub- jects studied in connection pee with countries visited. % Credit forthesecourses = . may be arranged. —-, =~ Travel arrangements ) are in charge of the rae . James Boring Co., Sat a known for the completeness of its itineraries. Rates from New York to New York includ-. ing shore excursions *616., Write now for descriptive literature to UNIVERSITY TRAVEL ASSOCIATION 66 Fifth Avenue New York City 1935-6 University W orld Cruise Sails Oct. 24. oe Above all Ym your fest Yam your Others may disappoint. I never do. I’m always mild, always fine to taste— because I’m made of fragrant, expensive center leaves, only. Turn your back on top leaves. They’re raw, bitter, stinging. Turn your back on bottom leaves. They’ re coarse, sandy,grimy. Before I consider it worthy, every leaf must be a center leaf, mild, fine-tasting, fragrant. I do not irritate your throat. Above all—J’m your best friend. P Copyright 1935, The American Tobacco Company.